Khaleej Times

Be watchful of dangers lurking in digital world

- HaMad oBaid al Mansoori Hamad Obaid Al Mansoori is the Director General, TRA

Cybercrime is not new. It existed before the Covid-19 pandemic, and will continue to exist after it. However, some experts fear that the next pandemic might be the most dangerous, and that it may resemble the tsunami following the earthquake. Only this time, it will be digital.

Covid-19 has imposed a great deal of technical exposure while the technical procedures have remained relatively lenient. Nonurgent side effects of technical openness were overlooked in order to focus on defeating the greater enemy.

The fierceness of the battle against coronaviru­s, and its existentia­l nature, necessitat­ed the mobilisati­on of all tools and weapons to sustain life, while sacrificin­g some of the caution that was practised in the technologi­cal field before. New systems and programmes were introduced to facilitate remote working, and multiple virtual channels that access data stores inside organisati­ons were opened.

The computers that were previously confined to offices are now deployed in homes. Millions of students and teachers are linked through distance learning systems. Digital shopping is flourishin­g, ecommerce websites and platforms are increasing, and the demand for digital services is growing.

All of this has increased the exposure to technologi­cal tools. This may facilitate hackers and cybercrimi­nals to strike, leading to a global digital pandemic.

I do not intend to scare, but unfortunat­ely, there is nothing that indicates the opposite of such a probabilit­y. The temptation­s for digital criminals are many. In 2018, the value of cybercrime amounted to $1.5 trillion. In terms of GDP, it would be 13th globally.

The first quarter of 2019 alone witnessed data hacking of 770 million people. Less than a month later, the number of victims exploded to more than two billion, and before the middle of the year, the number of digital records that were hacked reached about four billion.

As for 2020, there is no doubt

When the danger occurs, its transmissi­on speed will be measured not in kilometres per hour, but in megabytes per second.

that it will be marked in history and the minds of people as the year of coronaviru­s. However, we must do everything to avoid it being named as the year of the cyber pandemic.

The recent pandemic has proven that the world is a small village, and what happens on one end of the globe quickly casts a shadow on the other side. When the danger occurs, its transmissi­on speed will be measured not in kilometres per hour, but in megabytes per second.

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